90 t.% : , " ::&t:::"t::r :::t):f;?* :L :::i: ':' ,' ",,: 1 - .. :""" \::-: ..'::.. r ,'. 1. · , '.C.'-Wì1:t 4' ;''ii" .;K! ..' ...:.:.:;........ ........ . " .-:. : ;::::' :: ;{ Ji ':.:: :: : ......':.:. ":':':' '- :!!GJk:::":::::'.' " ::: .:. <= I ,L ::::.. .. :;=- :::. ,,,,:,,,,,,,. :'",',,::,::: :::';IIItI:Rliit:ïl .:-}::::::...:.:..:;:;::..;:::....:-:...;. ...;.:./ _ i.. ::.:::.::./::...;.:. .;'\:: ; ;:"::" ":::;: :,,: rï NØ1i,ji ; -:: i '_ :::: :.:. ::::. :':.: :: :::::: : :. .:-: ...... .-:.: ..... :::::: .:::. ..:.: :: Proclaiming the smart, new Easter Mode t9/ J) ... .. . "- . 'f 1(..'<;".. \ .r. . (' . . , <o:r.__ . 4_ u-;.-.:. ;""" 'Po :( " ..-? ' :ok\ _ .r.' ' '":,ù"< ;;'" "........... . ..O/. ' .. .."1'" ., ç ' !..:..r 'l"'" : . '7.' ... V7t-. r."r ).. ';>,..a:.::.,'\ .s;.. -. " í.. . . . . ..-;... .... . ..... . .. oJ .,. -'t,,:J.,.. " . _.... .4-.-... I ., . ...:.....( ': n: . ....- ''''Cì -['... ..;.;"::- . .. ./. .," :;"{., :..........er ,... Þr .:.r '+.t....." : :. :;; .:.: "f '? . ..9 ;, .. ...'.... .:.1........-...:: f ',a".'t.4- .. . W HO cal1't be glad ' at Eastertide with SlICh charming shoes to gladden the feet.? ..A.nd matching bag, in python too, is quite the thing! FIR ENeiH .1. f t O' EIR'Y 36 W-EST 50T-H STREET- NEW YORK MARCH 2-+. 1918 no proselyting on the courts. Ì ou don't win a man over to your game by making a monkey out of him, and that was what happened to the visit- "ing player in almost every match. Take the meeting, for instance, between Rowland H.aines, the squash tennis champion, and Herbert Rawlins, the squash racquets king. Rawlins got ten points in three games at squash tennis. He was so hopelessly flabbergasted by the speed of Haines' crashing up-and- down shots that he never made any move to reach the ball. He took it all as some inane joke, without being able to see the point of it any more than he could see the ball, and waited politely for Haines to get his fifteen points per game. Why, you might ask, did Haines, as royal a good fellow as there is in the game, do such a cold-blooded Job? They don't come any finer than the squash tennis champion, but he was playing not for himself but for squash tennis. The fewer points that Raw- lins got the better chance squash tennis would have of winning the team match. So every man was out for blood. Yes, it was a love feast aU right. The lion lay down with the lamb-inside. As one who has been put in his place, I rise timidly to repeat the ques- tion that was put to me by Phil Len- hart, one of the squash racquets play- ers. "Wouldn't it be more sensible," inquired Mr. Lenhart, "if, instead of playing to win and blowing the other fellow off the court, they forgot about the scores and tried to show each other a little bit about the game?" With that poser, which is offered for the gentlemen to ruminate upon during the next twelvemonth, I drop this delicate subject and turn to other fields in which I can be more dog- matic. A SIDE from the national open championship, which has been transferred from the Shelton Club to the Fraternity Club, the squash tennis season has come to a 'close, and I wish to gather up a few threads that were broken when I was led astray to' the court tennis and racquets courts. Columbia, as everyone knows, won the Class A team championship for the first time this year, but not everyone may be aware of the fact that during the entire season there was only one change in the Blue and White's line- up. Any team that can present its full strength week after week has won ha] f